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Journal Article

Citation

Klim C, Vitous CA, Keller-Cohen D, Vega E, Forman J, Lapidos A, Abraham KM, Pfeiffer PN. Adv. Ment. Health 2022; 20(2): 170-180.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/18387357.2021.2010585

PMID

35756076

PMCID

PMC9231833

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We characterized peer support specialists' self-disclosures related to suicide and recipient responses to inform services for high-risk individuals that may include peer support.

METHOD: We used an inductive approach and thematic analysis to identify themes from audio recordings of initial sessions between peer support specialists trained in suicide-related self-disclosure and 10 study participants who were admitted to inpatient psychiatry units with suicidal ideation or a suicide attempt.

RESULTS: The first theme, "I've been suicidal, but those details are not important", reflects that peers mentioned suicide-related aspects of their histories briefly, often as part of introductions, without participants responding specifically to those aspects. The second theme, "Being suicidal is one of the challenges I've faced", reflects that in more detailed disclosures by peer specialists and in participant responses, suicide is a part of the mental health challenges and life stressors discussed, not the focus. The third theme "Let's focus on my recovery and what I've learned" reflects that peers steered their self-disclosures away from suicide and towards what was helpful in their recovery.

CONCLUSIONS: Suicide-related self-disclosures embedded within peer specialists' introduction or overall recovery narrative convey a shared experience while focusing conversation on mental health challenges other than suicide.


Language: en

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